carebear said:it's a dangerous endeavor. be careful that animals and kids cannot get into your setup.
Exactly. There is no way to know the strength of your final lye solution without some expensive equipment and the strength will vary from batch to batch.ChrissyB said:I am of the understanding that the resulting "lye" will be of questionable strength and quality.
Not sure if it's worth the hassle.
JMHO> :roll:
(however, it's not acid - it's the opposite, actually. nor is it sodium hydroxide)vsavor said:I plan to make some this summer, also. As far as I can tell anything that won't corrode with the acid will be fine.
(however, it's not acid - it's the opposite, actually. nor is it sodium hydroxide)[/quote]vsavor said:I plan to make some this summer, also. As far as I can tell anything that won't corrode with the acid will be fine.
kelleyaynn said:Yes, lye is a base, not an acid. Strong enough, they can both corrode things. But, um, lye is sodium hydroxide. Or potassium hydroxide.
carebear said:which is why back in the old days, the resulting soap goo was then boiled in a strong salt solution - to replace sodium with potassium in the soap so you could end up with bars instead of goo.
What Carebear stated was the the resultant caustic from home made lye would NOT be either or an acid OR sodium hydroxide. And she is quite correct.
The alkali you'd end up with would be potassium hydroxide or caustic potash, but it would never be sodium hydroxide.
carebear said:which is why back in the old days, the resulting soap goo was then boiled in a strong salt solution - to replace sodium with potassium in the soap so you could end up with bars instead of goo.
kelleyaynn said:Wouldn't that be to replace the potassium with sodium?
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